Read Shamus In The Green Room Online
Authors: Susan Kandel
and one edge was ragged, as if it had been torn down the mid-
dle. The part that was left showed a towheaded teenager. He
was handsome, with sleepy eyes. Grinning like a fox. Unmis-
takably Rafe. He had his arm around a girl with long hair.
I saw something pass across Rafe’s face.
Smarinsky turned the photo over and tapped it with his fin-
ger. “This is the good part,” he said.
There was an inscription scrawled across the back, and even
though the ink had run, you could still read it: “Rafe and Me,
Summer 1979.”
“Lucky break for us that you’re famous. Couple of gals in
the office are fans. They knew it was you right away.”
Rafe chewed on his lip. Then he looked at Donaldson, who
smiled encouragingly.
“Take your time.”
Rafe swallowed. “I know her.”
Donaldson and Smarinsky exchanged glances.
“I need a name,” said Smarinsky, his voice tense.
“I want to see the body.”
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Donaldson looked unhappy. “We try to discourage that,
Mr. Simic. If you can make a positive ID from the Polaroid, it
would be better for all concerned.”
Rafe stood up. “I need to see the body.”
“Let the man see the body,” said Smarinsky, turning up his
palms.
“Very well,” the captain replied, looking extremely un-
happy now.
Everybody stood. Smarinsky yanked up his pants, which
were also too big.
“Cece,” said Rafe in an unmistakable tone.
Oh, no.
“Will you come with me?” he asked.
I am superstitious. I am afraid of ghosts. I believe in
haunted houses.
“Please,” he said, his voice quavering.
Stricken, I turned to Captain Donaldson. “That’s against
regulations, isn’t it? I mean, it’s not like I’m the next of kin or
anything.”
Donaldson started to say something, but Smarinsky inter-
rupted. “What the hell, am I right, Donaldson? The more the
merrier.”
This was a nightmare, a horrible, terrible day.
Someone buzzed us in. Hand in hand, Rafe and I walked
through a heavy wooden door with a small glass window at the
top, down a long, sterile corridor with low ceilings, and to the
elevator, whose doors closed abruptly, shutting us inside, so
that all we could smell was a horrible smell, sweet and rank,
which was the smell of dead bodies.
The doors opened with a pop.
“Service floor,” the captain said. “This way, please.”
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We followed him down the hall. Smarinsky gestured to-
ward a map of Los Angeles County covered with arrows and
pushpins.
“Crime scenes. We found your girl over here.” He pointed
to someplace in the South Bay. A small red arrow in the big
blue water. “She’d been in there for twenty-four hours, give or
take a few.”
Donaldson moved us along, nodding briskly at someone in
a puffy blue hazmat suit.
“It protects them during autopsies,” Smarinsky explained.
“Don’t know how you do it, Donaldson. The fumes, man.”
The captain ignored him and stopped in front of a
stainless-steel table. The body was loosely wrapped in white
sheets. He put his hand on Rafe’s shoulder.
“Shall we proceed, Mr. Simic?”
Rafe nodded, sticking his hands in his pockets.
The captain pulled back the sheets and stepped away.
I looked at Rafe, who looked at the dead woman. His whole
body went rigid with the effort. Then, when I couldn’t look at
him anymore, I looked at her. All I remember seeing was
white. Lips drained of color. Hair like wintry branches. An
endless expanse of cold, milky, white flesh.
Someone had closed her eyes.
“Maren Levander,” Rafe said, his voice cracking. “Shit. I’ve
got to call Will.”
“Will?” I asked.
“Maren is his sister. Will is—was—her brother.”
“And you?” Smarinsky asked.
Insensitive prick.
“I was her friend.” Rafe put his head in his hands.
“Thank you, Mr. Simic.” The captain pulled the sheet back
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up. “That pretty much does it, for now. If you’ll step into my
office for a moment, we can take care of the paperwork.”
“I’ll escort the young lady to the waiting area,” Smarinsky
volunteered.
My legs felt shaky as we walked back to the elevator. We
passed a dangerously high stack of folding chairs, then an open
door. Two men in white jackets were sitting inside, working.
“You know what those guys in there can do?” Smarinsky
asked me. “Sometimes the body’s so shriveled up they can’t get
a print, so they peel the skin off the hands and put it on, like a
glove. They get a print that way. Gotta have an iron stomach,
though.”
The doors to the elevator closed. I’d planned to hold my
breath until I was in the proximity of fresh air, but Smarinsky
kept asking me questions.
“What do you do for a living?”
“Write books.”
“You and the movie star an item?”
“No.”
“You are a resident of?”
“West Hollywood.”
I couldn’t tell if he was interrogating me or just trying to
keep me company.
It was six in the morning by the time Rafe was done. We
stepped outside. The sun was blaring, but it wasn’t as bright as
the flashbulbs popping in our faces.
“Fucking vultures,” Rafe said. “They never leave me alone.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“I used to love her.”
“I figured.”
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“Fuck.”
“Let’s get out of here.”
“Good idea.”
“I’m driving,” I said, taking the keys out of his hand.
“You’re buying.”
Coffee still costs a nickel at Philippe’s, home of the
French-dip sandwich, invented in 1918 when the orig-
inal Philippe, who was French, was preparing a sandwich for a
policeman and accidentally dropped the sliced roll into the
drippings of a roasting pan.
You couldn’t argue with the prices, not to mention the
clientele, which was the polar opposite of starstruck: Amtrak
riders stopping off on their way to Union Station across the
street; electricians; municipal-court judges; housepainters. I may
have detected a glimmer of recognition from the counterwoman
who took our order, but she was too efficient to indulge in that
kind of speculation. Rafe insisted he wasn’t hungry, but I or-
dered pancakes for him, a hot pink pickled egg for me, and a
coffee for each of us.
We took our trays and walked to the back room, where we
found an empty booth.
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“I can’t eat yet,” he said after sitting down. “What the hell
am I thinking? I have to call Will.” He stood up. “I left my
phone in the car. I’ll call him from out there. Is that okay?”
“Of course. Take your time.”
I watched him go. His T-shirt was hanging off his shoul-
ders. It looked a size bigger than it had the night before. Or
maybe it was Rafe who looked a size smaller.
When he was gone, I pulled out my phone and called Gam-
bino at work. I knew he’d be there. He’s a robbery/homicide
detective who takes his job very seriously. Lately, this has
caused some problems, but that’s another story.
I started crying the minute I heard his voice. When I was
done crying, I was incoherent. When I was done being inco-
herent, the story came out and it was so awful, I started crying
again. Halfway through, Gambino announced that he was
coming to get me, but I put my foot down. We’d had that par-
ticular discussion before. And I wasn’t prepared to go—not
yet. After the experience we’d just shared, Rafe needed me.
And maybe I needed him, too. Gambino said he understood.
I knew those weren’t just words. He didn’t say things he didn’t
mean. There was a moment of silence and then Gambino got a
call. He had to take it. He said he’d see me later at my place
and not to worry, he was cooking, which was a mixed blessing.
He was an excellent cook but not exactly efficient in the
kitchen. I’d be cleaning for days.
After we hung up, I walked across the sawdust-covered
floor and studied the Dodger memorabilia on the wall. Then I
sat back down, cut the pickled egg into quarters, then eighths,
and tried to put the slices back together again. But I couldn’t
make the yolks work.
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Rafe came back with red eyes. “Will took it well.”
“I’m glad.”
“I mean, as well as you could expect.”
“Of course.”
He sat down. “If you love Maren, you get used to surprises,
good ones and bad ones. That’s just the way it is. That’s just
what makes her Maren.”
He was still using the present tense. “I suppose he’ll want to
talk to the police,” I said.
“Yeah, he’s calling Detective Smarinsky right now. I never
even asked the cause of death.”
“And he’ll have to notify the rest of the family.”
“They’re dead. There is no other family. It’s just Will now.”
He cut into his pancakes so hard the knife scraped against the
plate. “Shit,” he said in disgust.
“It’s okay.”
“It’s not okay.” He pushed his plate away and raked his fin-
gers through his hair. “And this whole thing messes up our
plans. It’s not like we have extra time here. The movie starts
shooting soon.”
“You’re going to be brilliant.”
“Maybe we could take just a day off,” he said, “and then get
back to what we were doing.”
“That’s fine.”
“I guess I need to get my head together or something.”
“Tell me more about Maren,” I said.
Rafe became very interested in my empty coffee cup. “Can I
get you a refill? You look like you need a refill. It’s good coffee.”
My face got hot. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me. You
don’t have to say anything.”
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He shook his head. “It’s just that I can’t believe this. I can’t
fucking believe this.” He slammed his fist on the table, hard.
“Why the hell is this happening?”
I thought of Gambino, always after me to be sensible. “I
think maybe we should go.”
“No!”
I looked at him.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to raise my voice. Look, can we
just sit here for a little while longer?” he asked.
“Okay.”
Rafe twisted his lucky hat in his hands. He folded and un-
folded his napkin. Finally, he said, “We were inseparable.”
“You and Maren?”
He tore his napkin into neat strips and arranged them on
the scarred wooden tabletop. “It was me and Maren at first,
when we were just kids. Then it was Will and his girlfriend,
Lisa, too. Of course, I haven’t seen Maren in years and years.
Will’s barely seen her, either. We split up before I made my
first movie. God, it was so long ago. Back then,” he said, shak-
ing his head, “back then, though, we were unstoppable. The
four of us. Nobody could touch us.”
I didn’t quite get it.
He started to smile. “Do you know Maren was the one who
taught me to surf?”
I smiled back. “Really?”
“She wasn’t like other people. She’d be the only girl out
there at Lunada Bay, every single day. That’s on the peninsula,
the Palos Verdes Peninsula, where we grew up. Beautiful half-
moon cut out of limestone? You had to scale these high cliffs,
and brave the rocks just to get there. And deal with the surf
Nazis who thought they owned the place. Maren never so
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much as batted an eye at those guys. She’d be out there, every
storm season, where the waves would be breaking big—four,
five o’clock in the morning and still dark out—and nobody’s
watching the sunrise because they’re all watching her. She
liked to ride the waves that scared the shit out of everybody
else.”
“She sounds amazing.”
He looked at me curiously, then got up and threw the re-
mains of his napkin away. I followed him with both our trays
and dumped the contents into the receptacle. We walked out-
side. It was still early morning, but the sky was already choked
with smog.
“When you come right down to it,” Rafe said, “I don’t
know how amazing Maren was. She used to drive with her eyes
closed sometimes. I think she had a death wish.”
It was a strange thing to say, given the circumstances.
Oh, honey, not my Norma Kamali coat from the eight-
ies!” I screamed, grabbing the scissors out of little
Alexander’s hands.
Mondays are hard, even under the best of circumstances.
And my nerves were more than a little frayed from the events
of the previous day.
“Bad tiger,” said Alexander. “Snip, snip.”
“He’s a leopard,” I replied, hanging the coat back up in my
closet. “A fake one.” Not that a three-year-old cared about my
conflicted position vis-à-vis fur.
“Let’s not play with my clothes, okay?” This kid could dec-
imate my wardrobe in no time if I let him. Distraction was the
thing. I’d learned that over the four hours and counting we’d
been together. You don’t want to say no; you want to propose
alternatives.
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I looked at Buster, my teacup poodle, snoring peacefully in
his little wicker bed. “I know! Let’s put makeup on the dog!”